San Diego Union-Tribune

MYANMAR MILITARY USES FORCE ON CROWDS

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Police cracked down on demonstrat­ors opposing Myanmar’s military coup, firing warning shots and shooting water cannons to disperse crowds that took to the streets again Tuesday in defiance of rules making protests illegal.

Reports of many injured demonstrat­ors drew strong concern from the U.N.’s office in Myanmar.

“According to reports from Nay Pyi Taw, Mandalay and other cities, numerous demonstrat­ors have been injured, some of them seriously, by security forces in connection with the current protests across the country,” the U.N. said.

“The use of disproport­ionate force against demonstrat­ors is unacceptab­le,” said Ola Almgren, the U.N. Resident Coordinato­r in Myanmar.

Water cannons were used in Mandalay, Myanmar’s second-biggest city, where witnesses said at least two warning shots were fired in early attempts to break up the crowd. Gunfire could be heard on videos from the city, some of which showed police flailing with their batons at people trying to flee.

Police also used water cannons in the capital, Naypyitaw, for a second day and fired shots into the air. Police were reported to have also shot rubber bullets at the crowd in Naypyitaw, wounding several people. Photos on social media showed an alleged shooter — an officer with a short-barreled gun — and several injured people. Protesters posted photos online of bullet casings they said they found at the scene.

Unconfirme­d social media reports circulated of shootings with live rounds and deaths among the protesters, with the potential of sparking retaliatio­n against the authoritie­s — an outcome proponents of the country’s civil disobedien­ce movement have warned against.

The weekly magazine 7Day News reported on its Twitter account that a 19year-old woman was shot by police in Naypyitaw and was undergoing an emergency operation at the city’s main hospital. It cited Min Thu, the local chairman of the National League for Democracy party of ousted national leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

The protesters are demanding that power be restored to the deposed civilian government and are seeking freedom for Suu Kyi and other governing party members detained since the military took over and blocked the session of Parliament from convening on Feb. 1.

Security forces on Tuesday night raided the national office of Suu Kyi’s party in Yangon. Regional offices of the party had been raided last week in actions the party decried as illegal.

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